Welcome to the new EETimes.com!

You’ve probably already noticed our new look and feel--we’re very excited about the move to a simpler, more streamlined platform. But we’re announcing more than just a change in our appearance.

We’re building on a philosophy that we first introduced back in 2010 when we launched EE Life: Our goal was to bring the thoughts and comments of our remarkably insightful EE Times community to the front and center of our home page and in every article.

Immediately the floodgates opened and EE Times started rapidly evolving into a city center for the electronics engineering ecosystem: It became a place where everyone felt they had a voice. EE Times, as it turned out, was becoming a community. And the timing couldn’t have been better.

While EE Times was changing, so too was the industry. Once a part of large, co-located groups with domain experts side-by-side in cubicles, you found yourselves reaching far and wide, seeking online the peers you trusted to connect you with the right information at the right time.

But the options for objective dialog among you and your peers around the many technologies and twists and turns of the rapidly evolving electronics industry are limited.

Enter the new EE Times--the full realization of the community you’ve been building with us for the past 40 years. The site is dedicated to providing everyone a voice and connecting those who know with those who don’t, and those who have with those who need. All of course, on a platform custom built for our era, enabling rapid-fire conversation and interaction and surrounded by analysis of the latest industry happenings so you know at all times what’s really going on.

Tightly coupled to our events such as Design West and DesignCon, the new EE Times keeps the dialog and conversations and connections you make at these face-to-face events alive 365 days per year. And our events provide you the opportunity to meet in person the people you’ve connected with online during the year.

We’ve even added some new Designlines based on the hottest topics at DesignWest, including Android, Prototyping and SoC.

EE Times now has the strongest and deepest lineup of editorial, bloggers and contributors in the industry, including practicing engineers, independent consultants, analysts, and vendor experts with hands-on experience in the areas you need information on. We also are delighted to offer new features such as enhanced audio and video capability to enrich your online experience. All supported by a fresh, user-friendly design to make it more social, more useful and more personal.

The new EEtimes.com: It’s your community site. So don’t wait—you can join the conversation now by posting a comment below. We’d love to hear from you.

Click ALL OPINION and a list comes up. Each entry has the date and the title listed, but not the author. The author is very important for an opinion artlcle. The author should be listed.

Also, you only provide 2 sorting options, recent or most commented. A qualifier option would be appreciated, that is sort by author. With sort by author deslected, it would operate the same as now. Select sort by author and the sort switches to a 2-level sort, sorted first by author, and then within the section for each author by recent or most commented, as selected. This would make it easy to check up on posts by a favorite author.

Hey phononscattering, we've circled back and fixed the homepage such that the header is smaller and you can get to see more of the content on initial page load - regardless of the screen size, but especially in the case of laptops/tablets. Many thanks for the feedback and hope the mod helps. We're definitely happy to have it implemented. Best for now,

I'm a EETimes reader for 6 years now. Did not really like the previous version of the site. As for the new layout I'm not totally happy as it seems like there's no way of looking and searching of the old articles / posts (or at least it is done in some cryptic way). I was wondering if you could have all the history shown with dates of original post / articles and sort it the way you want (tables with search options were invented for this). I also find it really hard to come back to the article I was reading say a day before - if it does not appear on the quick tabs it looks like its almost gone (this article was on the tabs fortunately). The whole appearance of the site looks like some version on Amazon (total clutter) - I would much prefer if you guys could have more Google like approach (maybe have a button to switch if somebody likes this cluttered version). I'd love to see a professional forum that you can easily navigate where all the info would be in one table (so you could search by say: date of original post, date of last comment, title, author, design category) with no flying tabs, buttons, sections, thumbnails...